Your Art Is A Spell

Your Art Is A Spell 
Season 1 Episode 4

Ever feel trapped in a job that drains your soul instead of feeding it? Dreaming of a career where your many passions can coexist instead of competing with each other?

You're not alone. So many of us bounce between different interests, never quite finding that perfect role that embraces all of who we are.
Meet Edgar Fabián Frías – artist, witch, educator, and therapist who didn't just find their dream job... they created it. Their journey from collecting cans to becoming a celebrated multi-passionate creator wasn't a straight line – and that's exactly what makes their story so powerful.
Tune in to discover:
  • 🛑 Why conventional career paths might be sabotaging your happiness
  • 🗑️ The surprising connection between dumpster diving and professional success
  • ✨ How a pivotal intuitive reading changed everything
  • 🧩 Why your "random" jobs aren't random at all
  • 🌈 The "both/and" mindset that breaks career limitations
  • 🚀 When working part-time can actually accelerate your dreams
Edgar's journey teaches us that our dream careers don't have to make sense to anyone else. From call centers to counseling centers, from gallery assistant to full-time artist, their path proves that each experience – even the painful ones – can become an essential ingredient in your unique career magic.
Ready to stop forcing yourself into someone else's definition of success? Learn how to trust your dots, follow your intuition, and create a career that's as multifaceted as you are.
Check out the full episode of "Your Art Is a Spell" to hear Edgar's complete story and discover how you too can transform your winding path into your dream career!

To listen to my original Dream Job Spell Meditation originally on Michelle Tea's Your Magic Podcast
https://youtu.be/sYpjGa6cJc4?si=Ds-iNKOOv0IRy6_g

To purchase your own Dream Job Spell viewfinder published by Stories to Change The World
https://stcwpublishing.com/shop/p/dream-job-spell

To Watch / Listen to More Episodes
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEVN8TPFy9dYKoNr4LjNV9yDajN-ILKNR&si=1WF6GkfQh2pGfrzl

To send me a voice note
https://www.speakpipe.com/YouArtIsASpell

To learn more about me and my art practice
www.yourartisaspell.com 

To learn about my private practice Therapy With Edgar 
www.therapywithedgar.com

💌 Sign up for my newsletter: 
https://www.edgarfabianfrias.org/sign-up-to-my-newsletter

🕊️ Follow Me on BlueSky
https://bsky.app/profile/edgarfabianfrias.org

What is Your Art Is A Spell?

Welcome to Your Art Is A Spell, the podcast that ignites inspiring and transformative conversations about art as a magical practice. I'm your host, Edgar Fabián Frías—a multi-passionate artist, witch, therapist, and proud mutant shape-shifter. My art spells have reached audiences through social media, billboards, and skyscrapers and have even been placed on the surface of the moon! Join us as we explore how reclaiming your unique artistic voice and embracing bold creativity can transform your life and the world around you. Subscribe to the podcast and sign up for our newsletter at www.yourartisaspell.com to stay connected!

welcome your art is a spell and it will change 
your life and the world around you hey everyone  

welcome back to your art is a spell where we 
explore the magical intersection of creativity  

spirituality and transformation I'm your host 
Edgar Fabian Frias and today I want to take you  

on a journey my journey of how I became the 
multi-passionate artist witch educator and  

therapist that I am today this was inspired by 
the fact that a couple of years ago I created a  

dream job spell that took two forms a meditation 
that was commissioned by the artist and writer  

Michelle Tea that I'm going to be linking here in 
the YouTube video and also in the description of  

this podcast and the dream job spell also took 
the form of a viewfinder artwork and I will  

also be including that link in the description so 
if you want to see it you could also purchase it  

I think there are a few left but I didn't just 
wake up one day with this dream career the path  

has been winding it's been challenging sometimes 
and full of unexpected turns so buckle up because  

today I'm sharing all the different jobs I've had 
to normalize that becoming who you are meant to  

be is rarely a straight line so so my first job 
ever was actually working with my dad when I was  

really young he would take us out on weekends 
and we would collect cans from garbage cans we  

would go to the rich neighborhoods and we would 
look through their trash and we would collect  

cans to take to recycle my dad always made this 
a really fun activity for us I remember we would  

always end up going to McDonald's afterwards so it 
always felt like a fun celebratory thing to do and  

later on as I got older my dad would invite me to 
other jobs of his one that really sticks out was  

when we were tasked with emptying out the home of 
someone who had just died it was challenging but  

also really stayed with me for many years because 
we literally emptied out an entire home together  

finding photos old magazines records all of these 
things told the story of who this person was so  

you could see why this one really stuck with me 
and of course I also pet sat for people and I  

grew up Jehovah's Witness so I feel like another 
job I had even though it was unpaid was I would go  

door too sharing the good news of the kingdom of 
Jehovah I would also stand outside of donut shops  

sharing what I believed at that time was the good 
news so I've been a proselytizer for a long time  

and in many ways this is another iteration of me 
sharing the good news but that news has shifted  

now as you all know and you know my first real job 
was working as a locker room attendant at a pool  

that was in my town at this job the universe gave 
me a gift I met my first queer friend ever Arturo  

and I remember he came out to me on the first 
day of work and I remember really struggling with  

that because I was still Jehovah's witness and I 
wasn't sure about how I felt at the time having  

a gay coworker but I also remembered Another 
Part Of Me felt really excited to meet another  

gay person and little did I know that I would be 
coming out to him a few months later after this  

when I started undergrad at UC Riverside I became 
a peer counselor and I worked with students who  

were on academic probation it was my first taste 
of being a therapist and also really normalized  

the process of going to therapy for me and it 
was during this time that I visited a therapist  

for the first time and that fully changed my 
life from there at UC Riverside I worked as  

a psycholinguistics laboratory researcher where I 
was doing research using eye tracking machines and  

creating weird objects to see what words people 
would use to reference them this work informed my  

honor thesis which combined this eye tracking 
research with ideas of queerness and gender  

expansiveness and the results of my psychological 
research I ended up putting together into an art  

installation as you could see I've always been 
drawn to Bridging the Gap between seemingly  

disparate academic disciplines after I finished my 
honors thesis I studied abroad in northern England  

at the University of Leeds which is about 2 hours 
north of London by train I finished my art degree  

there so my undergrad I got both an art degree and 
a psychology degree and I finished my art degree  

in Leeds at the University of Leeds and after I 
finished it I ended up moving over to Berlin in  

Germany and I got a job briefly there as a gallery 
preparator assistant where I helped install some  

shows and I also helped communicate with the 
American buyers who would come to this gallery  

after my time abroad I came back to the US and 
I worked for a short time as a tutor where I was  

helping young children with their math and English 
skills I did this for a few months while I saved  

up money to move to Portland Oregon supplementing 
my income at the time by dumpster diving with my  

friend Sergio and selling the things that we would 
find in the dumpsters at flea markets or swap  

meets as they're called in Southern California 
and we made quite a bit of money from dumpster  

diving and with this money we moved together to 
Portland Oregon in 2008 right at the beginning of  

the recession so as you could imagine finding work 
was really hard at this time and I had just moved  

so the first job I could find was at a call center 
helping people transition away from having regular  

TV antennas to receiving free digital antennas 
from the government it was a bilingual call center  

and I remember having to wake up at 4:00 a.m. and 
take three buses to get to this job after this job  

ended I worked at another call center where we 
were processing credit card payments for cell  

phone providers in Spanish these were grueling 
repetitive jobs where I was treated like a cog in  

the machine I remember getting in trouble if I was 
just a few seconds late from my break and we were  

timed when we went to the restroom shortly after 
this job I ended up getting my first job ever as a  

parapsychologist or a therapist in training I was 
working with families who were having challenges  

with their children and doing in home therapy 
with them and it was a bilingual position and  

I remember this job was truly a turning point for 
me it was really at this time that I decided that  

I wanted to become a therapist because I wanted to 
learn how to work with myself and with others to  

facilitate healing while I was doing this I was 
also organizing an underground queer Music and  

Arts Festival this was a fully community-funded 
queer art and music festival in Portland and it  

actually grew out of Portland to a lot of places 
this became a job of its own even though it was  

unpaid but it was definitely lifechanging in many 
different ways while I was doing this I applied  

and got into graduate school to become a therapist 
at Portland State University in Portland Oregon  

I worked there in the college's Counseling Center 
as a therapist and then I moved to a somatic and  

mindfulness-based therapy practice in Portland 
where I did my internship and learned the hakomi  

method for somatic and mindfulness-based therapy 
both of these jobs were unpaid but they definitely  

taught me a lot about how to be a therapist and 
how to work with people so once I graduated I was  

high in demand as a bilingual therapist and I got 
a pretty big promotion because I was hired as a  

program manager for a domestic violence program 
in Hillsboro Oregon it was a nonprofit Center  

and I helped to develop a Therapy Program for 
Spanish-speaking families who had been victims  

of domestic violence and their children I really 
loved the work that we did in this program but I  

realized pretty quickly this wasn't the type of 
work I wanted to do long term so after being in  

this position for some time I decided to move 
to the Bay Area and the first job I got there  

was working with undocumented people who had 
been victims of crime providing free therapy  

for them that they received through a free program 
in California this position didn't last very long  

for reasons that I will not get to in this but 
after this I got a full-time job working as a  

social worker for the first time ever at the 
Golden Gate Regional Center in San Francisco  

at this job I had over 80 clients all of them 
had developmental disabilities many of them  

needing wraparound extensive care this was one of 
the hardest jobs I've ever had to do it exposed  

me to so much loss stress and danger I worked at 
this job for a year and a half and unfortunately  

due to some terrible things that happened 
at this job I was forced to leave the Bay  

area and moved to Los Angeles with my partner 
this is when things really shifted after moving  

to Los Angeles I was gifted an amazing intuitive 
reading from my old art professor and dear friend  

Asher Hartman that fully changed my life in his 
reading he urged me not to look for full-time  

work as a therapist as I had done many times in 
the past and to really find a part-time job as a  

therapist so that I could really focus on my art 
art practice even though it was hard I decided to  

do it and I got a job at a luxury Treatment Center 
in West Los Angeles where I ran a Saturday program  

that included art experimential activities like 
horseback riding going to the beach to visiting  

art museums and running therapy groups on my other 
days I focused on my art practice applying for  

grants for exhibition opportunities sharing my 
work on social media and I slowly began to get  

opportunities that led to other opportunities 
met the right people who invited me to work on  

projects with them and just as Asher had shared I 
started to become both an artist and a therapist  

at the same time yes this took a bit of time and 
there were months when I was really broke where I  

wasn't really sure if it was going to work out 
but I stuck it through and in spite of having  

so many different jobs and moving in a variety of 
many different directions my love and passion for  

art has always been there it's been unwavering 
as has my belief that my artistic vision and  

voice mattered and were important those are the 
things that kept me going and we need those as  

artists to really believe that we have something 
to share because for art you have to persevere  

and you have to have something that drives you so 
as luck or magic would have it just as I decided  

to leave my therapy job at the treatment 
center and open up my own therapy practice  

this this was shortly after I got my lmft 
or licensed marriage and family therapist in  

California I was awarded a 2-year artist residency 
in Tulsa Oklahoma This residency was fully funded  

there was a stipend I got a studio I got housing 
and I decided to do this because it would allow me  

to become a full-time artist for the first time in 
my life made the hard decision I closed my private  

practice I stopped practicing as a therapist my 
partner and I moved to Oklahoma and for the first  

time I worked fully as an artist and it was during 
this time that I completed two solo shows I was  

a part of a biennial in Bogota Colombia I was a 
part of a biennial in Los Angeles I shared my art  

at a psychedelic music and arts festival I did so 
much during these two years and I grew so much as  

an artist during this residency I applied and got 
accepted to UC Berkeley's MFA art practice program  

which I have been trying to get into for years 
I'll share another video here if you're watching  

on YouTube that uh talks a little bit more about 
my journey I will also share it in the notes for  

this podcast so my partner and I moved to Berkeley 
I began to work there as an art teacher this was  

during Covid and I was also getting paid to do 
workshops and ceremonies and live interactions  

online for example a museum paid me to create a 
whole mindfulness based program that I could offer  

their communities and really I pivoted a lot into 
the virtual realm during this time and got lots  

of gigs working virtually so by the time that I 
graduated from UC Berkeley I decided to restart  

my therapy practice therapy with Edgar this time 
fully virtual and with an emphasis on somatic  

parts work and I'm so happy to still have this 
therapy practice today I specialize in working  

with neurodiverse highly sensitive artists and 
multi- passionates like myself who are in the  

lgbtqia plus Poly ENM Kink and BDSM communities 
this practice coupled with my work as an artist  

has helped me find the perfect balance that feels 
just right for me at this moment I work one day as  

a therapist I'm working another day at Cal Arts 
where I teach a class and I dedicate the rest  

of my time to the many different art writing and 
teaching projects that I have going on yes I have  

found my dream job so looking back at this winding 
nonlinear multi-dimensional path here are some  

of the lessons that I've learned number one trust 
the seemingly disconnected dots each job even the  

ones that felt like detours gave me the skills and 
perspectives that make me unique in what I do now  

number two your path doesn't have to make sense to 
others what might look like career chaos to some  

was actually me Gathering the specific ingredients 
I needed for my specific magic number three  

listen to your intuition the reading from Asher 
was a pivotal moment because I trusted it even  

when it went against conventional wisdom about 
career stability I knew that this was something  

I really wanted I tuned into it and I went 
for it and committed number four embrace the  

both and instead of either or I didn't have to 
choose between being an artist or a therapist  

I found a way to be both on my own terms and 
you can too number five your dream job might  

not exist until you create it I've essentially 
crafted a career that didn't exist in any job  

listing by combining my passions and skills in 
unique ways fully committing to them and finding  

building forging a web around me to support me 
in all the different ways I show up in the world  

and I want to emphasize this there are 
so many ways to get to where you want  

to go and it might look different than what 
you thought it would be the path might feel  

weird nonlinear not right according to societal 
standards but that doesn't mean that it's wrong  

I haven't even mentioned all of the ways that 
I worked as some jobs lasted for even shorter  

amounts of time some of them are embarrassing 
to be quite honest I've been paid to do dozens  

and dozens of things from officiating weddings 
to speaking about my art with high schoolers  

and at universities to hosting virtual support 
groups for artists and offering tarot readings  

at libraries and galleries one big thing that has 
come out of this journey is that I've learned I'm  

no longer a worker I'm a Creator a deal maker 
and someone who gets to show up in as in many  

ways as I feel called to so in our next episode 
we'll be talking with an artist who I feel also  

follows this multi-dimensional nonlinear path her 
name is Reina Prado and I look forward to sharing  

our conversation with you in the meantime 
please subscribe to this podcast share it  

with your friends sign up for our newsletter at 
yourartisaspell.com and if you're watching this  

on YouTube I want to invite you to give a thumbs 
up click subscribe and leave a comment how does  

my journey compare to yours have any questions 
about any of the steps or jobs that I've had  

what are your dream jobs I want to hear and also 
I want to mention that as a part of season 1 I  

am going to be gifting a free 30 minute tarot 
reading to someone who leaves me a review go  

to Apple podcasts or Spotify leave this podcast 
at review and I will be selecting a person in a  

future episode to receive a free 30 minute tarot 
reading with me until next time remember your art  

is a spell in whatever form it takes and it will 
change your life and the world around you bye